Platyhelminths - University of East London
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Transcript Platyhelminths - University of East London
Platyhelminths 2
Cestoidea
David Humber
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Cestodes - Tapeworms
Endoparasites
No mouth or alimentary tract
Attachment organ - anterior
Elongated body - divided into proglottids
Adults in intestines of vertebrates
Larval stages in 1 or 2 intermediate hosts
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Cestoidea
Tissue & Intestinal
Tissue cestodes
(extra-intestinal)
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Echinococcus grqnulosa •
Echinococcus multilocularis•
Multiceps spp
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Spirometra mansonoides •
Diphyllobothrium spp
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Taenia solium
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Disease
Hydatid disease (6k)
Hydatid disease (rare)
Coenurosis (rare)
Sparganosis (rare)
Sparganosis (?)
Cysticercosis (?)
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Cestoidea
Tissue & Intestinal
Intestinal Cestodes
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Diphyllobothrium latum
Taenia solium
Taenia saginata
Hymenolepis nana
Hymenolepis diminuta
Dipylidium canis
Cases
16 million
5 million
76 million
36 million
Rare
Rare
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Intestinal Cestodes
Tapeworms
Attached via a scolex to mucosa (small intestine)
Composed of proglottids forming a strobila
Each proglottid contains male & female
reproductive organs
Immature >> Mature >> Gravid
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Tapeworms
Hymenolepis nana
• Dwarf tapeworm (upto 40mm - largely children)
Taenia saginata -
• Beef tapeworm (upto 25m)
Taenia solium
• Pork tapeworm (upto 7m)
World-wide distribution
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Hymenolepis nana
Dwarf Tapeworm
Intermediate host not required
• infection via intermediate insect host rare
• commonest tapeworm in UK and US (<1%)
Eggs via oral-faecal route
Hatch in stomach/small intestine
Larvae (onchospheres) penetrate villi
Develop into cysticercoid stage
Migrate back into lumen
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Hymenolepis nana
Dwarf Tapeworm
Maturation 2-4 weeks
Length dependent on parasitemia
Scolex - 4 suckers + short rostellum with
hooks
Eggs released by disintergration of terminal
proglottids
Eggs immediately infectious
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Hymenolepis nana
Dwarf Tapeworm
Often asymptomatic even with high worm
burden
• headache, dizziness, anorexia, abdominal pain,
diarrhea, low grade eosinophilia
• Heavy infections via auto infection (in intestine)
Diagnosis by egg morphology (adults v rarely
seen)
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Hymenolepis nana
Control
World-wide incidence 4%
Treatment usually Praziquantel previously
Niclosamide (both single oral dose)
Health education
Rodent reservoir?
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Taenia saginata
Beef Tapeworm
Commonest taenia infection (Ethiopia)
Ingestion of raw or poorly cooked beef
Larvz digested & evaginates in small
intestine
Scolex 4 suckers no hooks
Proglottids 1-2k (lateral unterine branches
15-20)
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Taenia saginata
Beef Tapeworm
Motile proglottids crawl through anus
during day
Eggs identical to T. solium (viable upto 159 days)
Larvae (onchospheres) hatch in cattle
intestine
Migrate through villi via lymphatics/blood
to striated muscle
Develop into cysticerci (bladder worm)
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Taenia saginata
Beef Tapeworm
Usually asymptomatic
• hunger pains, weight loss
• discomft & embarrassment at voiding
proglottids
Diagnosis based on recover of gravid
proglottid (uterine branches >15)
Praziquantel or niclosamide
Health education
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Taenia solium
Pork Tapeworm
Recognised since biblical times
Risk of cysticercosis
Evagination > six hooked four suckers larva
(onchophore) in small intestine
Attaches to mucosa (penetrates in cysticercosis)
Matures in 5-12 weeks
Usually long lived (25 years) single worm
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Less than 1000 proglottids
Taenia solium
Pork Tapeworm
Usually asymptomatic similar to S.
saginata
• Low grade eosinophilia <15%
Treatment
• praziquantel
• niclosamide
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Taenia solium
Cysticercosis
Onchospheres penetrate intestine (adult
worm not usually found)
Distributed via mesenteric venules
Most organs including brain, eyes,
sucutaneous and intramuscular
Sometimes multiple organs (geographical
variations)
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Taenia solium
Cysticercosis
Bladder worms upto 60ml in volume
(usually around 5 x 800 mm)
Diagnosis
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surgical removal
X ray - calcified larvae
CT scan or MRI for brain lesions
Fine needle aspirate
Serology/PCR
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Taenia solium
Cysticercosis
Treatment
• surgical removal
• praziquantel (15 day course)
– only treatment for cysticercus
• albendazol (8 day course)
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Tissue Cestodes
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Taenia solium
Echinococcus grqnulosa
Echinococcus multilocularis
Diphyllobothrium spp
Multiceps spp
Spirometra mansonoides
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Echinococcosis - Hydatid disease
Echinococcus granulosa
• worldwide
Echinococcus multilocularis
• Europe, Russia, China, Canada
Echinococcus vegeli
• Central & South America
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Distribution
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Hydatidosis
Known since Hipporates 400BC
Most serious of the tapeworm infections
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Hosts
Definitive Host
• Canids & felids
– 59% dogs in Istanbul (E.granulosa)
Intermediate Host
• humans +60 species
– ungulate,marsupials, elephants,primates,
– rodents for E. multilocularis
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Lifecycle
Definitive host
Intermediate host
Egg production
Worm lives 2+ years
Cyst evaginates
Hatch - onchosphere
invades mucosa &
penetrates capillaries
Cysts form in liver & lungs
Secondary metastasis
20+ years
Secondary daughter cysts
bud in E. multilocularis
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Clinical Features
Definitive Host
• usually asymptomatic
Intermediate Host
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dependent on burden & site
usually single - 50% in liver, 3% brain (E.g)
incubation +5 years
6-10% diagnosed cases fatal
Eosinophilia in 25% cases
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Diagnosis
Parasitological
• eosinophilia
• palpation
Radiological (CT & MRI) & ultrasound
• differente from tumor
Immunological
• Skin test - Casoni test - 18% false +ves
• Serology
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Treatment & Control
Surgery
• drainage + 5 mins 10% formalin
Praziquantel or albendazol
• steroids to prevent inflammation
• aspiration + 95% ethanol
Health education
• sanitation - dogs cats raw meat
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Diphylobothrium - Sparganosis
Diphylobothrium latum
• Broadfish tapeworm
Definitive host
• humans/dogs/cats/pigs/bears/otters, seals
etc
First intermediate host
• Copepods
Second intermediate host
• trout/salmon/perch/pike
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Intestinal infections
Limited to fish eating areas
• raw or improperly cooked
• dumping untreated raw sewage
Adult worms (upto 10m)
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attach to lining of intestine
Ovoid operculated eggs released
Eggs dormant in water (8-12 days)
motile coracidium hatches ingested by
freshwater copepod
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Intestinal infections
Ciliated embryophore shed & naked
hexacanth larva attaches by hooks
Bores through intestinal wall into
haemocoel
Hexacanth metamorphose into procercoid
(14-18 days) 500um in length
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Intestinal infection
In fish procercoid penetrates intestinal
wall
migrates to muscles
develops into plerocercoid (20-40mm) in
7-30 days with fully developed scolex
In definitive host attaches to mucosa
grows at 30 proglottids a day
Full sexual maturity in 3-5 weeks
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Sparganosis
Some species of Diphylobothrium and
Spirometra
larva invade
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Nematode Infections
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Nematodes
Half million species
50% free living
animal & plant parasites
Animal
• vertebrate & invertebrate hosts
• infection by ingestion
• penetration
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Nematodes
Generally elongated, cylindrical & tapered
at each end (99%)
fluid filled pseudocoelom logitudinal
muscle only
no vasculature or respiratory system
usually sexual dimorphism (some
parthenogenetic)
males usually smaller than females
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Ascaris
Large intestinal round worm
mouth with I dorsal & 2 ventral lips
female 40cm male 30cm
Uterus of mature female 20+ million eggs
Sheds 200,000 golden brown ovoid eggs
per day
Eggs resistant to desiccation
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